So we’d have a coffee, maybe
two, then off
into
town by the side streets, looking for
red-brick
houses with lilac doors and yellow
window
frames. Drop
into
the IFI, sit over
another
coffee, browsing the catalogue with half interest,
the
steady drift of film-goers and idlers with more.
On
down Dame Street to College Green,
enjoying
our
navigation of ever-shifting crowds,
the
dexterous manoeuvrability
of ourselves.
In
Hodges Figgis we’d
scan the
poetry
shelves
and
the art books,
those names
and titles
settling
in our heads like we were
travelling the
world:
Heaney, Mahon, Carver, Balthus,
Kahlo,
Lorca, Basho, Holub ‒
dabs of fresh paint
and
print to keep us informed
for a month or two ‒
before
returning to Grafton
Street to
knit crooked stitches
through
the crowds, stop a few
minutes to hear a busker
play
a saw
or slide guitar then around
to Tower Records
to
be tempted by some new ECM arrival in the
jazz section.
George’s,
Aungier, Wexford, Camden, Richmond Streets;
the
diminishing scale of a
city’s architecture,
and
the
backwards walk down the
telescope to the landscape
of
our normal
lives. Crossing the border at the canal, with
its
familiar vista
down Rathmines Road to the mountains
beyond;
we,
like fish, breathing
easier in our own habitat,
saw
our hurdles flattened, but,
perhaps, never
recognized
the
days of our lives?
That
beautiful odyssey: Saturdays,
mid-morning to mid-afternoon;
or
maybe it was just one
Saturday,
or,
maybe, it
wasn’t at
all.